ON THE ROAD Editor of collection Laura Andreini
editorial project Forma Edizioni srl, Firenze, Italia redazione@formaedizioni.it www.formaedizioni.it editorial direction Laura Andreini author Chiara Ingrosso editorial staff Maria Giulia Caliri Livia D’Aliasi Andrea Benelli graphic design Isabella Peruzzi Alessandra Smiderle translations Katy Hannan Graham Robertson for NTL, Florence photolithography LAB di Gallotti Giuseppe Fulvio, Florence
texts by Laura Andreini Josep Maria Montaner Ton Salvadó Alessandro Scarnato Roberto Cosenza: pp. 30, 34-38, 44, 50, 64, 74, 90-94, 136, 166, 176, 180, 204 Chiara Ingrosso: pp. 28, 32, 36, 40, 46-48, 52-54, 60-62, 66-68, 70-72, 76-88, 96-108, 164 Aurora Maria Riviezzo: pp. 112-134, 138-154, 158-162, 168-178, 182-202, 206-208
Chiara Ingrosso is an Architect and assistant Professor in History of Architecture at the Department of Architecture and Design of the University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli, where she teaches History of Architecture and Design. She won scholarships and she taught at various international universities, among which: Barcelona, Istanbul, Beijing and Johannesburg. She is author of essays and monographs published in Italy and abroad
© 2019 Forma Edizioni, special edition for Ajuntament de Barcelona The editor is available to copyright holders for any questions about unidentified iconographic sources. All rights reserved, no part of this publication may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the publisher, without prejudice to the legal requirements provided for in Art. 68, subsections 3, 4, 5 and 6 of Law No. 633 of 22 April 1941 First Edition: February 2019 ISBN 978-84-91561-95-8
With the support of:
Table of contents
Guidebook as tool 4 Barcelona 5 Political / geographical facts General information Useful tips
6 7 8
Barcelona, a shared story Barcelona, changing the rules of the game Barcelona beyond the model
10 12 14
Barcelona skyline
16
Strategies for visiting Barcelona 20 Routes 22 Ciutat Vella 24 Poblenou 56 Montjuïc – Llobregat 110 Eixample – Gràcia – Sants – Sarrià 156 Museums 210 Theatres 211 Restaurants 212 Hotels 213 Architectural offices 214 Index by architect Index by project
218 220
Transport 222
Guidebook as tool
On the Road is a collection of contemporary architecture guidebooks whose purpose is to tell about a place, whether a city or larger area, through its architectural works chosen to be visited and experienced directly. The guidebook has a convenient special jacket that opens into a map marking the location of the architectural works and interesting sites to visit. On the back are miniature images and addresses of the architectural works described in detail within. The book starts with short essays explaining the city or area’s present day and history and outlining possible future scenarios with planned or imminent projects. Each work features a photograph of the whole, an architectural drawing (plan or section), a short description, and facts including architect, type, year of construction, address, website, and how to visit it. The finest architecture of each city and suggested routes are represented by this collection of not-to-be-missed, “timeless� buildings that uniquely define their settings. General information and useful tips for travelers help them optimize their visits and quickly understand the essence of the place described. Museums, theatres, restaurants, hotels and a list of top architectural firms working in the city let visitors turn a regular trip into an opportunity for study or work. Note: The pinpoints outside the maps at the beginning of the itineraries are viewable on the rear of the book jacket.
4
Barcelona Laura Andreini*
The first Spanish city to be explored in the On the Road series is Barcelona, a metropolis that has demonstrated for decades a strong international quality, because of its geographical position, its important port, and because of its competitive desire to distinguish itself in a certain way from the capital, Madrid. One of the most interesting aspects of contemporary Barcelona lies in the integration of its outstanding architectural interventions within a clearly defined urban plan. This began back in the late 1980s when Barcelona was preparing to host the 1992 Olympic Games, and in the new urban layouts of certain areas, constellations of archistar interventions changed the configuration of the Barcelona skyline. For years, the city has played a leading role in the most important publications of architecture and urban planning; vast redevelopment projects have modernised important areas of the city, and after a short pause caused by the economic crisis in 2008, today, Barcelona has made a comeback with its avant-garde social and urban planning policies. In the last ten years, but especially since 2015, the Barcelona municipal administration has focused careful attention on improving public spaces. In fact, Barcelona is a city famous for its intense urban lifestyle, and public policy has decided to defend and encourage this characteristic quality. In recent years, the focus has moved from archistar landmarks to projects of excellence, integrating external spaces, an aspect that should never be underestimated. Barcelona is following a route to transform itself into a green city promoting sustainable transport, over private vehicles. The increase in green urban spaces also facilitates better integration of local populations within their neighbourhood or area, aimed at accomodating the increasing tourist population, without sacrificing the living space and quality of life of the locals. The best way to visit a city is to share the lifestyle of its people, and Barcelona is a city that provides this experience to the fullest. The tour visits eighty-six projects, each in this book in detail, and is divided into four itineraries. The divisions are aimed at encouraging visitors to explore individual “quarters�, to view the best examples of contemporary architecture, and at the same time, to take the time to stroll, ride a bike, or travel on public transport to enjoy the experience of such a high quality urban centre.
*A rchitect and Associate Professor at DIDA, University of Florence. Cofounder of Studio Archea where she still works, she is also writer and Deputy Editor for area magazine
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Sagrada Familia Vila Olímpica Towers PRBB Parc de Recerca Biomèdica de Barcelona
Š Denis Esakov
W Barcelona
Gas Natural Fenosa BarcelĂł Raval
Strategies for visiting Barcelona
To visit Barcelona well, it is best to plan at least five or six days. Four itineraries have been proposed in this guide, and all can be followed on foot or by subway. The shortest itinerary is the first, and focuses on the old centre of the city, which can be seen in a single day. The Medieval Gothic buildings which are particularly important in this area have not been included in the guide, so we advise visitors to refer to specific guides for these architectural examples. Itinerary A / Ciutat Vella This route includes several significant buildings, mainly in the old city dating before the 19th century. The choices focus almost exclusively on contemporary architecture and the redevelopment or restoration of old buildings. In particular, from the 1980s to the present day, the Ciutat Vella has been the centre of numerous projects, including urban planning, which have made the area one of the most dynamic in the city. The itinerary begins on the east side with the Mercat de Sant Antoni/01, crosses the Raval quarter, now home to several important contemporary art and culture museums like the MACBA, the CCCB/07, the Filmoteca de Catalunya/04, to continue to the west through the Ribera and Born quarters, with the two important markets of Santa Caterina/08 and Born/09, before reaching the seafront, at Barceloneta, terminating at the W Barcelona/13. Itinerary B / Poblenou This itinerary includes the east side of the city, encompassing the Poblenou quarter, the historical expansion of the initial urban centre, and home to important industrial factories from the early 19th century. The route includes some visits in the Vila Olímpica/15, an urban area particularly important in the contemporary history of Barcelona, transformed for the 1992 Olympic Games. The route continues further east, from Plaça de les Glòries Catalanes as far as the zone which hosted the Forum of Cultures in 2004. Starting at Torre Agbar/22, the route continues along the length of Avinguda Diagonal, with a number of new buildings, mainly office blocks, which form a faceted wall of striking high-tech architecture, including the Diagonal 197/23 and MediaPro/24. Former industrial plants were the foundation for the construction of the Poblenou Campus/26 and the Museu Can Framis/29. In the zone closer to the seafront, among the buildings constructed for the Forum of Cultures, the guide includes the CCIB Centre de Convencions Internacionals de Barcelona/36 and the Museu de Ciències Naturals de Barcelona/37. 20
Itinerary C / Montjuïc – Llobregat This itinerary covers the western side of the city from the Montjuïc hill to the Llobregat river and includes the Zona Franca and the Porta Fira Trade Fair. The Montjuïc area is above all linked with the Universal Exposition of 1929, and the very famous German Pavilion/41 by Mies van der Rohe, and the 1992 Olympic Games, which led to the expansion of the sports facilities and the creation of the Torre de Comunicacions de Montjuïc/45 by Santiago Calatrava. Further along the Avinguda de la Gran Via is the Ciutat de la Justícia/48 and the Plaça d’Europa with the Torres Porta Fira/52. The Zona Franca, flanked by the new subway line with the interesting Metro L9 stations/51, houses the Parc Logístic/53 area, one of the most important service industries in the country for international goods flow that will be linked with the airport and the high speed railway line through the new subway lines. Itinerary D / Eixample – Gràcia – Sants – Sarrià This final itinerary focuses on the most significant architecture in the northern area of the city. It includes the interesting restoration and redevelopment plan of the Centre Cívic Cristalleries Planell/61, and the Mercat del Ninot/64. It also focuses on some of the most important modernist buildings in the Eixample, following the application of the Cerdà Plan (1859). Among the buildings are works by the undisputed Catalan master of Modernism, Antoni Gaudí. As well as the Sagrada Familia/69 and Park Güell/75, we have also selected some residential blocks: Casa Milà “La Pedrera”, Casa Batlló and Casa Vincens/67, that were recently restored. The 1992 Olympic Games also left their mark in this area with the Torre de Collserola/82, designed by Norman Foster, which dominates the Barcelona urban landscape with its 288 metre tower on top of the Tibidabo Hill.
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07. C CCB Centre de Cultura Contemporània de Barcelona – MACBA Museu d’Art Contemporani de Barcelona CCCB Carrer de Montalegre, 5 08001, Barcelona Tue - Sun / 11 am - 8 pm Mon / closed +34 93 306 41 00 info@cccb.org www.cccb.org
© David Viaplana Canudas
L1 / L2 > Universitat
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Two of the most important museums in the city were created in the northern part of the Raval district in the mid-nineties: the MACBA Museu d’Art Contemporani de Barcelona and the CCCB Centre de Cultura Contemporània de Barcelona. They were constructed in the area formerly occupied by the Caritat convent complex, partly fallen into disrepair in the 1950s. The Pla Especial de Reforma Interior (PERI) plan, of 1985, had identified a large number of unused public buildings in bad condition, including the Casa de la Caritat, the Casa de la Misericòrdia and the convent complex of dels Àngels. The PERI re-proposed a previous urban project for the two convent complexes and the adjacent church, that had been designed in 1981 by the architects, Lluís Clotet and Óscar Tusquets, entitled “Del Liceu al Seminari”. The project envisaged a route running parallel to les Rambles, from the Liceu theatre to Plaça de la Universitat, created by connecting the former convent buildings and giving them a new cultural purpose. The Pla de Museus project, of 1984, and the successive urban development plan for the Casa de la Caritat destined the buildings for museum and exhibition space to “recover and revitalise an important area of the Raval district”. The CCCB (Albert Viaplana, estudio Viaplana/ Piñón) and the MACBA (Richard Meier &
© Adrià Goula
Ciutat Vella
architects Viaplana/Piñón
type multi-purpose exhibition space
construction 1994
41
08. Mercat de Santa Caterina The Santa Caterina market, inaugurated in 1848, was the first covered market in Barcelona. The reconstruction project also includes the surrounding urban fabric in order Mon, Wed, Sat / to improve the quality of the public spaces. 7.30 am - 3.30 pm The new intervention was aimed at “mixing Tue, Thu, Fri / and blending” with the original structure 7.30 am - 8.30 pm (which preserved the side walls and portico +34 93 319 57 40 façade). It features a remarkable new roof info@mercatsantacaterina.cat that extends beyond the perimeter of the www.mercatsantacaterina. original structure into the adjacent square. com Clad externally with a mosaic of enamelled ceramic tiles representing a multi-coloured sea of fruit and vegetables, the roof becomes the main feature of the building with L4 > Jaume I a homage to Gaudí. The structure is quite complex, based on a series of irregular wooden vaulted ceilings set on steel beams of various sizes, mounted in different directions, and in turn, supported by concrete pillars. Miralles and Tagliabue conceived the building as a huge tent, inside which the market stalls have been arranged without any specific order, just like traditional rural markets. Miralles died before the construction was completed.
© Miralles Tagliabue EMBT
Avinguda de Francesc Cambó, 16 08003, Barcelona
44
Š Roland Halbe
Ciutat Vella
architects Miralles Tagliabue EMBT
type retail
construction 2005
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60. Roca Barcelona Gallery Carrer de Joan Güell, 211 08028, Barcelona Mon - Sat / 10 am - 8 pm Sun / closed +34 93 366 12 12 www.rocabarcelonagallery. com
© Office of Architecture in Barcelona Carlos Ferrater Partnership
L3 > Les Corts
154
In 2009, the Carlos Ferrater architectural firm created the first showroom for the Spanish Roca company in the Les Cortes district. Roca is one of the world’s leading producers of bathroom fixtures. The building is composed of a compact rectangular box structure, with a glass curtain wall, specifically built by the Spanish company, Cricursa. The main feature of the outer shell is the aquamarine glass panels that de-materialise the surface, refracting the sunlight, and lighting up at night with a system of 4,200 LEDs. The Roca Barcelona Gallery is the first of a series of buildings the company is constructing in major cities in Europe and Asia, commissioned from renowned architectural firms to demonstrate the company’s constant research into ecologically sustainable and innovative design.
© Aleix Bagué
Montjuïc – Llobregat
architects OAB – Office of Architecture in Barcelona (Carlos Ferrater, Borja Ferrater)
type retail, exhibition centre
construction 2008 - 2009
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67. Casa Vicens – Casa Batlló – Casa Milà “La Pedrera” Casa Vicens: Carrer de les Carolines, 20-26 08012, Barcelona Casa Batlló: Passeig de Gràcia, 43 08007, Barcelona “La Pedrera”: Passeig de Gràcia, 92 08008, Barcelona Casa Vicens: Mon / 10 am - 3 pm Tue - Sun / 10 am - 7 pm Casa Batlló: Mon - Sun / 9 am - 9 pm “La Pedrera”: Summer and Christmas / Mon - Sun / 9 am - 8.30 pm, 9 pm - 11 pm Winter / Mon - Sun / 9 am 6.30 pm, 7 pm - 9 pm Casa Vicens: +34 93 54759 80 Casa Batlló: +34 93 2160306 “La Pedrera”: +34 93 2142576 casavicens.org www.casabatllo.es www.lapedrera.com L3 / L5 > Diagonal
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Between the 19th and 20th centuries, Barcelona underwent a large demographic boom which led to the creation of the brand new quarter called Eixample (literal translation: “enlargement”), established in the famous urban plan designed by Ildefons Cerdà. A large number of middle-class houses were built, principally located along and around the Passeig de Gràcia, the main 19th century road between Barcelona and the small town of Gràcia. In 1878, fresh from university, the young Antoni Gaudí designed his first house, Casa Vicens. This residence, which was recently restored by Martínez Lapeña-Torres Arquitectos, materialises his concept of strong structural expression, in a blend of Catalan revival and Islamic-Mediterranean styles. In 1904, when restoring Casa Batlló, he experimented with a more organic style that resulted in the sculpted façade in Montjuïc limestone and decorated with tessera in multicoloured ceramics. Later, the massive undulating stone profile of “La Pedrera” emerged in the midst of the compact order of the neighbourhood. Gaudí concealed the structural system but maintained his strong expressive quality.
© Catalunya La Pedrera Foundation
Eixample – Gràcia – Sants – Sarrià
architects Antoni Gaudí
type museum, residential
construction Casa Vicens: 1888 Casa Batlló: 1904 -1906 “La Pedrera”: 1906 - 1912
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77. Turó de La Rovira Carrer de Marià Labèrnia 08032, Barcelona open to the public
www.bunkers.cat
© Jansana, de la Villa, de Paauw, arquitectes
L4 > Alfons X
190
At a height of 262 metres, Turó de La Rovira offers the most extensive views over the whole of Barcelona. Used as an antiaircraft battery emplacement during World War II, it was later occupied by about 100 illegal dwellings that were cleared and dismantled before the Olympics. The zone was rendered usable again in 2011 after careful restoration work by the architects, Jansana, de la Villa, de Paauw and Jordi Romero, specialised in urban scale landscape interventions. The aim of the project was to keep intervention to a minimum in order to restore the area as a historical site, preserving the multiple architectural layers as far as possible. Turó de La Rovira is an archaeological space that includes traces of World War II, the self-constructed habitations that grew spontaneously over the 20th century, and the evolution of Barcelona’s urban fabric heritage. The project was awarded the European Prize for Urban Public Space 2012 for “its rarity and originality in terms of protection of the immaterial heritage”.
© Lourdes Jansana
Eixample – Gràcia – Sants – Sarrià
architects Jansana, de la Villa, de Paauw, arquitectes; AAUP, arquitectes (restoration)
type park
construction 2011 (restoration)
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Museums Born Centre de Cultura i Memòria Cultural and Memorial Centre of Barcelona Plaça Comercial 12, 08003 Barcelona
elbornculturaimemoria.barcelona.cat Tel +34 93 256 68 51
CCCB Centre de Cultura Contemporània de Barcelona Research and Temporary Exhibition Centre Montalegre 5, 08001 Barcelona
www.cccb.org info@cccb.org Tel +34 93 306 41 00
CosmoCaixa Science Museum Carrer d'Isaac Newton 26, 08022 Barcelona
www.cosmocaixa.es Tel +34 93 212 60 50
Fundació Antoni Tàpies Museum of modern and contemporary art Carrer d'Aragó 255, 08007 Barcelona
www.fundaciotapies.org Tel +34 93 487 03 15
Fundació Joan Miró Collection of works by the artist Joan Miró Parc de Montjuïc, 08038 Barcelona
www.fmirobcn.org info@fmirobcn.org Tel +34 93 443 94 70
Fundació Suñol Museum of contemporary art Passeig de Gràcia, 98, 08008 Barcelona
www.fundaciosunol.org info@fundaciosunol.org Tel +34 93 496 10 32
Jardí Botànic Botanical Gardens Parc de Montjuïc, Dr. Font i Quer 2, 08038 Barcelona
www.museuciencies.cat Tel +34 93 256 41 60
MACBA Museu d’Art Contemporani de Barcelona Museum of modern and contemporary art Plaça dels Àngels 1, 08001 Barcelona
www.macba.cat Tel +34 93 481 33 68
Museu de Ciències Naturals de Barcelona Museum of Natural Science Plaça Leonardo da Vinci 4-5, 08019 Barcelona
www.museuciencies.cat museuciencies@bcn.cat Tel +34 93 256 60 02
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Museu del Disseny de Barcelona Museum of Design Plaça de les Glòries Catalanes 37, 08018 Barcelona
ajuntament.barcelona.cat/ museudeldisseny museudeldisseny@bcn.cat Tel +34 93 256 68 00
Museu del Temple Expiatori de La Sagrada Familia Historic museum Carrer de Mallorca 401, 08013 Barcelona
www.sagradafamilia.org informacio@sagradafamilia.org Tel +34 93 208 04 14
Museu Nacional d’Art de Catalunya Museum of modern art Palau Nacional, Parc de Montjuïc, s/n, 08038 Barcelona
www.museunacional.cat Tel +34 93 622 03 60
Pavelló alemany Mies van der Rohe Contemporary architecture Avinguda Francesc Ferrer i Guàrdia 7, 08038 Barcelona
www.miesbcn.com pavellomies@miesbcn.com Tel +34 93 215 10 11
Theatres Gran Teatre del Liceu La Rambla 51-59, 08002 Barcelona
www.liceuBarcellona.cat Tel +34 93 485 99 00
El Molino Carrer Vilà i Vilà 99, 08004 Barcelona
es.teatrebarcelona.com/el-molino
Mercat de Les Flors Carrer de Lleida 59, 08004 Barcelona
www.mercatflors.cat/ info@mercatflors.cat Tel +34 93 256 26 00
Palau de la música C/ Palau de la Música 4-6, 08003 Barcelona
www.palaumusica.cat/ca Tel +34 93 295 72 00
Sala Beckett Carrer de Pere IV 228-232, 08005 Barcelona
www.salabeckett.cat Tel +34 93 284 53 12
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